Government Savings Bank donates 100,000 baht
to Father Ray Foundation
Angkhana Pilanowat Chimanas
(center right), MD of the Government Housing Bank, presents a 100,000 baht
donation to Father Pattarapong Srivorakul (center left), president of the
Father Ray Foundation, to add to the vocational training building fund.
Warunya Thongrod
Government Savings Bank donated 100,000 baht to the Father Ray
Foundation to help build a vocational-training center for the disabled.
Bank Managing Director Angkhana Pilanowat Chimanas presented foundation
President Rev. Peter Pattarapong Srivorakul and Redemptorist Vocational
School for People with Disabilities Director Udomchok Churut with the
donation Feb. 7. Bank employees also provided lunch for more than 100
children and disabled students.
The cash will be used to construct a four-story
vocational-training center on the Redemptorist Center for Children with
Special Needs campus.
“This activity is a good opportunity for executives and employees of GHB to
participate in doing good for the society,” Angkhana said. “This is an
activity that we conduct to celebrate the month of love and is also our
resolution, which we have made into a policy, to take responsibility for the
society and environment in regards to simultaneous development of society
and education.”
“GHB and the Father Ray Foundation have always had a good relationship and
it has always sponsored us,” Udomchok said. “We need more resources to help
children and stimulate their development. I believe this is an important
part to help sustain the society, empower the children and disabled as when
they came to us.”
Construction began on the new center in November. It will consist of a
development room, daily-skills training, music room, computer room, library,
vocational-preparation room and vocational-training room with tools to
increase skills within various courses such as technology officer, office
work, parts production, services, crafts and handwork. The target is to
provide personal training to 330 individuals per year.
|
|
Culture plays a huge role in shaping people and civilisations
Member Ren Lexander spoke at
Pattaya City Expats Club meeting on Sunday, February 9, on the topic “Legacy:
Shaping Individuals and Civilisations.”
Thailand has never been colonised, so Thais have never seen
their top leaders being forced to bend their knees before anyone. Contrast that
to the beheading of monarchs in France and England, and you start to get an idea
of how history has influenced modern cultures.
This was one of the messages delivered by PCEC member Ren Lexander when he spoke
at their Sunday, February 9 meeting on the topic “Legacy: Shaping Individuals
and Civilisations.” Ren is an author who has had seven books published,
including “Seduction by the Stars: An Astrological Guide to love, Lust and
Intimate Relationships” (co-written with a professional astrologer); “Eye of the
Shadow,” and “The Secret Meaning of Names.”
MC Richard Silverberg presents Ren
with a Certificate of Appreciation as thanks for his well researched
presentation, which saw one of PCEC’s highest ever attendances.
Culture plays a huge role in shaping people and
civilisations, Ren said, citing the Ten Commandments as an example. Most people
who grew up in the Judeo-Christian traditions can’t recite all of the Ten
Commandments, he said, but they are nevertheless shaped by them.
The Ten Commandments are very black and white (“Thou shalt not…”), Ren
explained. Thailand, a Buddhist country, has no concept of the Ten Commandments.
Instead, it has Buddha’s 8-fold path which talks about the “right” things to do
- for example, right thought, right speech, and right action. For Thais, Len
said, the “right” thing to do may include telling a lie if that is what keeps
the other person from getting upset. That’s why Thais will say things they think
will make you happy.
Another example of how our cultures differ is marriage. For Westerners, Ren
explained, when you marry someone you “forsake all others” and you start a new
entity, a new family. Parents are relegated to the background. But for Thais,
marriage is not the start of a new entity; one’s existing family remains
important. The primary commitment is still to one’s parents.
Senior Specialist from Bangkok Bank,
Waraporn draws the winner of a gift basket, kindly donated by Bangkok Pattaya
Hospital.
Hierarchical chains are a feature of both cultures, Ren said,
though it manifests itself differently. In Judaism, there was a strict chain,
with God at the top, followed by angels and prophets. At the other end of the
scale were women, lepers and non-Jews. Jesus upset this order for a while, but
after his death the chain came back stronger than ever.
One manifestation of hierarchy in Thai culture is the family. Thais don’t refer
simply to their bothers and sisters, Ren explained. Instead, they use words like
“sister older,” “sister younger” and “brother younger.” Another manifestation is
the body itself, where the head is considered sacred (“don’t touch a Thai person
on the head in public”) and the feet are seen as the lowest and filthiest part
of the body (“don’t point your foot at someone”).
In Ren’s opinion, the chain of command has dissipated somewhat in Western
countries, but it is still very much present in the East. In the type of
hierarchical society that exists in many Asian countries, communication often
suffers because people are too deferential towards others higher up the chain
than themselves. This can cause major problems, Ren said, such as when Korean
Air lost airplanes at a rate 17 times the industry average. Workers in the
company were afraid to speak plainly to their superiors about problems they had
identified.
Ren said that this kind of deference is often embedded in the language. When the
airline finally implemented measures to fix their ailing airline, one of the
first things they did was to ban the use of the Korean language in the cockpit.
Because of this and other changes, Korean Air is now one of the safest airlines
to fly, Ren said.
There is something called the “power distance index” or PDI. It was developed by
a Dutch man. The PDI measures the extent to which subordinates or ordinary
citizens submit to authority. Ren said that South Korea is the second highest
country on the index, after Brazil. New Zealand and Australia have the lowest
PDI. People in Australia will call anyone “mate” no matter how important they
are. This is an example of very “flat” communication.
Democracy can also be seen as a very flat concept, Ren explained - one person,
one vote. In that sense, it challenges hierarchies. Ren said that the people
demonstrating in the streets of Bangkok are saying that there is more to
democracy than one person, one vote. At the same time, many Thais think that the
people of Isaan are below them in the hierarchical chain, so how can they be
creating the government?
The notion of an apocalypse - i.e. a cataclysmic event that changes the existing
order - has had a big impact on Western civilization, Ren said. Examples of
apocalyptic events are Martin Luther and the reformation; the English civil war
that led to the beheading of King Charles I; the French revolution; and the end
of slavery in the United States. There is no similar concept in the tradition of
Buddhist countries.
For people who want to delve further into this topic, Ren recommended two books:
(1) “Outliers: The Story of Success” by Malcolm Gladwell; and (2) “Predictably
Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions” by Dan Ariely.
After Ren answered many questions from the standing room only assembly, Master
of Ceremonies Richard Silverberg brought everyone up to date on upcoming events
and called on Roy Albiston to conduct the Open Forum where questions are asked
and answered on Expat living in Thailand; particularly Pattaya.
For more information on the Club’s many activities, visit their website at
www.pcecclub.org.
|
|
Thai Garden Resort delivers donated toys,
clothes to Tungkom-Talman School
Little Nayana Fischer (2nd left)
during her acceptance speech.
Elfi Seitz
Students at Tungklom-Talman School received everything from clothes to
toys to school supplies during a recent visit by the staff of the Thai Garden
Resort.
General Manager Rene Pisters, Manager Danilo Becker and a few employees arrived
at the school with a pickup full of gifts. They were joined by Swiss tourist
Ruedi Flatt, who learned about the Thai Garden’s “Toys for Joy” project during
his stay in Pattaya.
Hotel guests and members of the public donated the gifts and cash for the annual
project during the holidays.
General Manager Rene Pisters
distributes the gifts.
Many items were donated and the cash was used to buy more for
the poorest amongst the children. They were asked first what they wanted and
they got exactly that.
Many wanted shoes and clothes, but the No. 1 wish on this list was, of course,
toys that their parents could not afford to buy. And quite a few asked for
school supplies, since their parents weren’t able to provide them. The rest of
the children also were given something, from sweets to smaller toys, so that
nobody was left out.
It was not only great fun for the children, but for the Thai Garden staff as
well, who enjoyed the shine of thanks in the children’s eyes.
One student, Nayana Fischer, the daughter of Rotarian Bernd Fischer, made
everyone’s day when she thanked the hotel workers for all the presents and all
their efforts on behalf of her classmates in perfect English.
Children cheer the Thai Garden group
for the great gifts they received.
|
|
Eastern Seaboard Rotary members enjoy
‘First Overland’ documentary
Nigel Quennell (center) presents a token of thanks
to Michael Todd-White (right).
Elfi Seitz
About 200 Rotary Club of Eastern Seaboard members reveled in the
cinematic telling of the first successful overland expedition from London to
Singapore at its latest meeting.
Member Michael Todd-White brought the British Broadcasting Corp.’s DVD
compilation of the 1956 “Travelers Tales” programs for club members. For some,
it was their first exposure to the 1955-56 trek in Land Rovers through France,
Monaco, Germany, Austria, parts of Slovenia, Croatia and Macedonia, Greece,
Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Myanmar,
Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore.
The expedition was undertaken by six young students at Oxford and Cambridge in
England: Adrian Cowell, Henry Knott, Antony Barrington-Brown, Tim Slessor, Pat
Murphy und Nigel Newberry. They didn’t have money, a special education or even a
car. But they were able to persuade the 80 sponsors, including the BBC, The
Companion Book Club, Land Rover and legendary director David Attenborough, to
support them and supply film.
They knew several expeditions had tried the journey before, but none had made
the entire trip.
Seven months and 12,000 miles later, they arrived in Singapore accompanied by
police and greeted by flashbulbs and champagne.
The films - shot in color but only broadcast in black and white by the BBC -
actually document only a small portion of the journey. The full travelogue is
detailed in Slessor’s 1957 book First Overland: London-Singapore by Land Rover.
The re-mastered DVD shown in Pattaya includes additional interviews with the
members and an “extras” movie produced by Barrington-Brown.
At the end of the show, club President Nigel Quennell presented a token of
thanks to Todd-White for arranging the evening.
The guests really enjoyed the “journey” as if they
could take part.
|
|
|